Dementia vs Alzheimer’s disease – what is the difference?

Dementia and Alzheimer’s disease are terms almost everyone has heard about, but do we really understand what the specific terms mean? Interestingly, the one question that I’ve been asked repeatedly over the past few weeks is to explain the difference between Alzheimer’s disease and dementia.

My goal for this blog is for you to understand neuroscience and to be able to apply it to your everyday life. It is important to me that what I communicate to you is clear, accurate and the terminology is consistent with what is used elsewhere. Therefore, the following information comes from the good folk at Alzheimer’s Australia…

Dementia describes a collection of symptoms that are caused by disorders affecting the brain

Dementia is not one specific disease. Dementia affects thinking, behaviour and the ability to perform every day tasks. Brain function is affected enough to interfere with the person’s normal social or working life.

The hallmark of dementia is the inability to carry out everyday activities as a consequence of diminished cognitive (thinking) ability.

Doctors diagnose dementia if two or more cognitive functions are significantly impaired. The cognitive functions that may be affected include:

memory

language skills

understanding of information

spatial skills

judgement

attention

People with dementia may have difficulty solving problems and controlling their emotions. They may experience personality changes, agitation, delusions or hallucinations. The exact symptoms experienced by a person with dementia depend on the areas of the brain that are damaged by the disease causing the dementia. With many types of dementia, some of the nerve cells in the brain stop functioning, lose connections with other cells, and die.

Dementia is usually progressive. This means that the disease gradually spreads through the brain and the person’s symptoms get worse over time.

There are many types of dementia caused by different brain diseases

The most common types of dementia are…

Alzheimer’s disease

Vascular dementia

Lewy body disease

Frontotemporal dementia

Mixed dementia, where more than one disease affects the brain, is also very common.

Alzheimer’s disease

Alzheimer’s disease is the most common form of dementia, and accounts for around two-thirds of dementia cases. It causes a gradual decline in cognitive abilities, usually beginning with memory loss.

Other symptoms can include:

lapses of judgement

personality changes

difficulty performing usual activities

getting lost

becoming disoriented about places and times

reduced language skills

delusions

becoming short-tempered and hostile

apathy

depression

anxiety

Alzheimer’s disease is characterised by two abnormalities in the brain – amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles. Amyloid plaques are abnormal clumps of a protein called beta-amyloid. Neurofibrillary tangles are bundles of twisted filaments made up of a protein called tau. Plaques and tangles stop communication between nerve cells and cause them to die.

Vascular dementia

Vascular dementia is cognitive impairment caused by damage to the blood vessels in the brain. It can be caused by vascular disease, a single stroke, or by several mini-strokes occurring over time.

Vascular dementia is diagnosed when there is evidence of blood vessel disease in the brain and impaired cognitive function that interferes with daily living. Symptoms of vascular dementia can begin suddenly after a stroke, or may begin gradually as blood vessel disease worsens.

The symptoms of vascular dementia vary depending on the location and size of brain damage. It may affect just one or a few specific cognitive functions.

When vascular damage occurs deep in the brain, symptoms can include:

diminished motivation and initiative

loss of insight and apathy

poor planning

poor concentration

When vascular damage affects the cortex (outer layer of the brain), symptoms can include:

changes in sensory and motor functions

language impairment

memory loss

confusion

Lewy body disease

Lewy body disease

Lewy body disease is characterised by the presence of abnormal clumps of the protein alpha-synuclein, called Lewy bodies, that develop inside nerve cells.

Typical symptoms can include:

attention problems

reduced spatial skills

memory impairment

poor problem solving and planning

visual hallucinations

depression

balance and walking difficulties

People with Lewy body disease may experience large fluctuations in attention and thinking. They can go from almost normal performance to severe confusion within periods ranging from minutes to days to weeks.

Frontotemporal dementia

Frontotemporal dementia involves damage to the frontal and/or temporal lobes of the brain. Symptoms often begin gradually and progress slowly over a period of years.

There are two main presentations of frontotemporal dementia – frontal (involving behavioural symptoms) and temporal (involving language impairments). However, the two often overlap.

Because the frontal lobes of the brain control judgement and social behaviour, people with the frontal or behavioural variant of frontotemporal dementia often have problems maintaining socially appropriate behaviour. They may:

be rude

neglect normal responsibilities

display compulsive or repetitive behaviour

have an increased appetite

be aggressive or violent

show a lack of inhibition

act impulsively

The temporal or language variant of frontotemporal dementia reduces language skills such as:

object naming

fluency of speech

word retrieval

comprehension of what others are saying

difficulties in reading and writing

Alzheimer’s Australia is an outstanding resource for more information on understanding dementia and memory loss, services and support (for carers and those with dementia), fundraising, and research. Check it out here: www.fightdementia.org.au